- Judges on a federal appeals court panel in San Francisco questioned two prominent lawyers about whether a Berkeley cellphone warning law is unfairly alarming. [Bay City News]
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Google will pay you $200,000 to hack their phones. [CNet]
- SF's lowest-priced home sale last week was a $580,000 one-bedroom in Hunter’s Point. [SF Gate]
- Small-business owner in Washington sues Yelp, saying it is liable for an "unfair" one-star rating. [Consumerist]
- The [SF Chronicle]'s John King weighs in on the Bayview's renovated Opera House.
- Celeste Guap plead no contest to battery charges Wednesday. [KRON 4]
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Gmail was briefly down for users in the US and Europe this morning. [CNet]
- City Controller Ben Rosenfield released a long-awaited report on Tuesday that weighs in on one of the wonkiest but important policy questions before the city: What is the maximum amount of affordable housing the city should require developers to sell and rent without jeopardizing overall housing construction? [Chron]
- A 100-year-old woman was hospitalized Tuesday, a day before San Francisco sheriff’s deputies were slated to evict her from her Western Addition apartment. [Bay City News]